Making 2rpm motor spin slower?

Hello all, I got a Disco ball preparing for the XMAS season but it is spinning a little too fast at 2rpm and gets you dizzy, I would like to have it spin slower at around 1rpm would be ideal, I tried a Lamp Dimmer switch and plugged the ball motor directly into it but this did not help, when I move the slider, at a certain point it would either turn the motor on or off so it does not control the speed, another electrician told me to try a Fan control switch but another told me if the Dimmer switch does not work then the Fan control which does the same exact thing will not work either.

Can anyone here offer a simple cheap solution please as this ball will only be used once or twice this season. I would like to get a device which would simply plug into the wall and then I can plug the motor into that device but if that's not possible then I am a little handy, I can cut the end of the motor wire and wire it directly unto the device which will control the speed og the motor, any ideas/advice/referrals please? Thanks.

Making 2rpm motor spin slower?

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Making 2rpm motor spin slower?

I am not am not an electrician Rick so I have no idea of what you just referred to or where I can get one? I will do some reseacrh on it on the net but I would appreciate some link or something to it in the meantime please?

Making 2rpm motor spin slower?

@Scorpio

One major problem is that the ceiling is only 8' high so if I have to drop the ball down any further by using any extension between ball and motor then this will be too low which is why I am looking for something to control the speed from the wall's AC outlet.

Making 2rpm motor spin slower?

Making 2rpm motor spin slower?

The dimmer you had was probably a cheap dimmer that uses resistors (or something) to reduce the voltage to the motor. If it's a 100v motor, it needs close to that to operate. If you drop the voltage to 90v, it might spin slower but at a certain point there won't be enough voltage to make the motor spin. So 50v might seem like it will reduce the speed by 50% but in practice it won't spin at all.

A fan control switch probably uses PWM (pulse width modulation) and will be more expensive. PWM supplies the same voltage but it does it in pulses. So instead of always having electricity, it will switch the voltage on and off really fast. It does it very quickly so that the motor turns on and off many, many times a second. It gives you the full voltage so the motor will spin but the motor won't get to full speed because it doesn't have the voltage on long enough.